Common Sense —
News from the Home Front
Fallujah, Iraq — For three weeks, my FOX News team has been immersed in little more than what's been happening around us. Memorial Day isn't, as they say over here, "on our radar screens." The soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines we've been covering and living with in Al Anbar Province have been focused on chasing terrorists, avoiding IEDs and staying alive. They call it "situational awareness" (i.e. being alert to only the friendly and enemy situation in the immediate vicinity) and it's an absolute necessity for these young Americans in harm's way in this hot, dusty and dangerous place. And because these troops believe that what they are doing is important to their families and their country, it's a good thing they can't see what passes for "news" back in the states.

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Earlier this week, we arrived at "TQ." It was once one of Saddam's Air Force bases and is now a major U.S. logistics installation between Fallujah and Baghdad. While we waited in a sweltering concrete hangar for a helicopter flight to Baghdad, one of the Marines offered the use of his "office" — a plywood enclosure inside the revetment — so that we could charge the batteries on our equipment. Unfortunately, he also had recent editions of several U.S. newspapers, magazines and a television. We made the mistake of reading the papers and turning on the TV.
The single satellite service in the region, which airs U.S. programming, carries only one cable news network — and it isn't FOX. Like the periodicals, the broadcast was a broadside of anti-American propaganda, worthy of a radical Islamic website. There were stories about how the Newsweek fable about U.S. prison guards desecrating the Koran "could have been true." Others provided the latest casualty figures from IEDs and suicide car bombers. Several highlighted the conviction of a U.S. soldier for "war crimes."
As is commonplace, various "experts" derided U.S. policies and tactics, bemoaned the "terrible consequences" for America in the region, and whined about the absence of an "exit strategy." In one, General Wesley Clark proffered a diatribe on U.S. failures. The rest of the "news" was about Michael Jackson's pedophilia trial and the threat of a "nuclear option" in the U.S. Senate over judicial nominees. There were no success stories, no mention of courageous U.S. troops carrying the fight to the enemy and no "knowledgeable authorities" testifying about how things just might be getting better in Iraq.
Perhaps it's just fatigue after three weeks in the field. It's possible that after six trips to Iraq and two to Afghanistan, I'm "too close to the story" to be "objective." Conceivably, by living with those fighting the war, I can't "see the forest for the trees." Maybe those who report from New York, Washington or Atlanta really do have "the big picture" in clearer focus than those of us who document what's happening at the "tip of the spear." But I doubt it.
Despite print and broadcast stories to the contrary, the hundreds of young Americans we've interviewed and covered on this trip haven't lost their élan. Notwithstanding the negative news, they continue to believe that they are winning this war. And on this third Memorial Day of Operation Iraqi Freedom, their success include:
These are just a few examples of the good news from Iraq that won't be news at home. Since this is Memorial Day weekend, I'm going to get down on my knees to thank God for those who have made the ultimate sacrifice serving our nation and pray for those who do so today. And I’m going to slip in another prayer — that those who report "the news" back at home will report on some of the successes that these brave Americans have wrought with their blood, sweat, and tears. Perhaps you'll join me.
Oliver North is a nationally syndicated columnist and the founder and honorary chairman of Freedom Alliance. He also hosts "War Stories" on FNC, which airs Sunday's at 8pm ET.











